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You need to contact the person to whom you have given the direct deposit instructions (Usually your employer) and submit a written request to change the direct deposit account number. In the request you need to mention the new account number into which you expect the money to be credited. In most cases, employers have a website in which you can login and change your direct deposit account details. If they don't have it, a written letter should do.
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Direct Deposit is a facility using which companies can credit the monthly paycheck or salary for their employees into their respective bank accounts. For example, my employer credits my salary on the 1st of every month into my bank account. All I have to do is submit a written request to my employer with the details of the bank account into which I want him to credit my monthly salary.
There are two ways to answer this question.. both of them are no. 1) If writing a check from your husands account, the signature in the bottom right hand corner needs to be his. No one else is allowed to sign the that corner except for the account holder. If you are both on the account then both or your names will be typed on the top left of the check, so either of you will be able to sign that line in the bottom right hand corner. 2) If you are asking about a signing a check that is written out to your husband, only he can sign the back of it. If he has asked you to deposit it into his account for him and has forgotten to sign the back then you are allowed to write "For Deposit Only" on the back and write his account number below if you know it. You are never allowed to cash a check that is written out to him unless he has signed the back, then written "pay to the order of (YOUR NAME) and then you have signed below. If it were going into a joint account you may deposit the check and receive cash back assuming you have money in the account.
Under some circumstances, yes, but in general no. For instance, you can usually deposit checks written to your minor children into your account.
You need to contact the person to whom you have given the direct deposit instructions (Usually your employer) and submit a written request to change the direct deposit account number. In the request you need to mention the new account number into which you expect the money to be credited. In most cases, employers have a website in which you can login and change your direct deposit account details. If they don't have it, a written letter should do.
If the bank account is, in fact, under both, the husbands and wife's name, than either can deposit a check into the account. If the check is written out to both names and the account is only in one name then both individuals would have to be present with ID in order to deposit the check.
If the check was knowingly written against a closed account or an account with insufficient funds, yes.
If you or your lawyer is the trustee, then you need to get the trust account banker to close the account, obtain written confirmation that it has been closed, and then destroy all associated checks after transferring the money. If someone else is the trustee, it will be up to them to close it.
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No you cannot. It will be considered a forgery. A cheque can be deposited only into the account of the person to whom the cheque is written to. So, if you perform that act of forgery, you can be jailed for doing it.
its memoirAn account of the personal experiences of an author is called a memoir. It is written in a first-person point of view just like most autobiographies.
journal
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monetary policy
its memoirAn account of the personal experiences of an author is called a memoir. It is written in a first-person point of view just like most autobiographies.